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Testing habitat complexity as a control over bryozoan colonial growth form and species distribution
Hageman, S.J.; McKinney, F.K.; Jaklin, A. (2013). Testing habitat complexity as a control over bryozoan colonial growth form and species distribution, in: Ernst, A. et al. Bryozoan Studies 2010. Lecture Notes in Earth System Sciences, 143: pp. 105-119. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-16411-8_8
In: Ernst, A.; Schäfer, P.; Scholz, J. (Ed.) (2013). Bryozoan Studies 2010. Lecture Notes in Earth System Sciences, 143. Springer: Berlin. ISBN 978-3-642-16410-1. viii, 463 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-16411-8, more
In: Lecture Notes in Earth System Sciences. Springer: Heidelberg; Berlin. ISSN 2193-8571; e-ISSN 2193-858X, more

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Keywords
    Ecology
    Growth habit
    Population functions > Recruitment
    Species richness
    MED, Adriatic Sea [Marine Regions]
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Hageman, S.J.
  • McKinney, F.K.
  • Jaklin, A.

Abstract
    The aim of this study is to test the effects of fine scale (microhabitat) environmental variation on the distribution of bryozoan species and potential variation in growth habit diversity and disparity. Data are derived from six microhabitats in replicate, on designed apparatuses, providing surfaces of varied complexity and orientation. The apparatuses were deployed on a sediment substrate at 24 m depth offshore of Rovinj, Croatia and recovered 14 months later. Species distributions were documented for each microhabitat and indexed for relative abundance. Twenty-five bryozoan species were recorded in multiple 0.5 × 0.5 cm cells in multiple patches on each microhabitat. Species richness was relatively uniform in each microhabitat, but most individual species and several growth habit attributes differed in abundance or presence among microhabitats.

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